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词条 Lilith Sternin
释义

  1. Role in Cheers

  2. Role in Frasier

  3. Creation and development

  4. Reception

  5. References

      Bibliography  

  6. External links

{{pp-move|small=yes}}{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2012}}{{Infobox character
| colour = #DEDEE2
| name = Dr. Lilith Sternin
| series = Cheers / Frasier
| image = Lilith Sternin in "Sisterly Love".png
| caption = from the Cheers episode "Sisterly Love" (episode 167, 1989)
| first = Cheers:
"Second Time Around"
(season 4, episode 17)
Frasier:
"The Show Where Lilith Comes Back"
(season 1, episode 16)
| last = Frasier:
"Guns N' Neuroses"
(season 11, episode 9)
| portrayer = Bebe Neuwirth
| occupation = Psychiatrist[1]
| spouse = Frasier Crane (ex-husband; 1988–1993, re-enacted in 1992)
Brian Patchett (ex-husband; 1994–1998)
| gender = Female
| family = Betty Sternin (mother)
Blaine Sternin (half-brother)
| children = Frederick Crane (son, with Frasier)
| relatives = Martin Crane (ex-father-in-law)
Niles Crane (ex-brother-in-law)
| religion = Judaism
| nationality = American
}}

Lilith Sternin (formerly Sternin-Crane)[2] is a fictional character on the American television sitcoms Cheers and Frasier, portrayed by Bebe Neuwirth. The character first appears as a date for Frasier Crane, though mutual hostility and discomfort causes the evening to end badly. Several months later, Lilith meets Frasier again and, with some help from Frasier's ex-fiancée, Diane Chambers (Shelley Long), they start a romantic relationship, eventually living together, marrying, and having a son, Frederick.

In the final season of Cheers, Lilith has an affair with another man and leaves Frasier. The affair later unravels and Lilith returns, seeking reconciliation with Frasier. Although Cheers ended ambiguously with regard to Frasier and Lilith's marriage, at the beginning of the spin-off series Frasier, their divorce had been finalized, with Lilith gaining custody of Frederick and remaining in Boston while Frasier has moved back to his hometown of Seattle. Lilith occasionally appears in Frasier, sometimes with Frederick.

Role in Cheers

Lilith first appears in the Cheers episode, "Second Time Around" (1986), as Frasier Crane's (Kelsey Grammer) date. In the episode, their first date does not go well. Lilith walks out of the date because she disdains the bar as Frasier's location for their date and Frasier's activities at the bar. In "Abnormal Psychology" (1986), they feel mutual attraction again when he becomes accustomed to her makeover, done by Diane Chambers. At first reluctant to start over again, they then decide to go for another date. For years they live together since, as first shown in "Dinner at Eight-ish" (1987). "Our Hourly Bread" (1988) reveals that they wed one month before the episode. (In "Smotherly Love" (1992), they re-enact their wedding to please Lilith's mother Betty (Marilyn Cooper), who was irritated that she had not been present for their marriage.) In "The Stork Brings a Crane" (1989), Lilith gives birth to Frederick during the taxi ride home after false labor in the hospital.

The tenth-season Cheers episode "I'm Okay, You're Defective" (1991) features two plots: one subplot about Lilith pressuring Frasier to finalize his will and one main plot about Sam Malone's concern that his sperm count may be low. The episode's epilogue is described as "Many years later" with an elderly Lilith and adult Frederick (Rob Neukirch) sitting for the reading of Frasier's will. The lawyer opens the sealed envelope and is surprised to find Sam's sperm count report, which turns out stable. In response to the mix-up, Lilith bitterly remarks, "That damn bar."

In the eleventh and final season (1992–93), in "Teaching with the Enemy" (1992), Lilith admits her affair with another man – Dr. Louis Pascal (Peter Vogt). In "The Girl in the Plastic Bubble" (1992), Lilith leaves Frasier, with him contemplating suicide until she promises to him that the marriage can be saved, to live with Pascal in Pascal's experimental underground eco-pod. In "Is There a Doctor in the Howe?" (1993), a depressed Frasier almost has sex with Rebecca Howe in their bed until Lilith unexpectedly returns. In the following episode, "The Bar Manager, The Shrink, His Wife and Her Lover" (1993), Lilith storms out of the room to go to Cheers, demanding the others tell her how long Frasier and Rebecca have been having an affair. The other characters have no idea as the affair has barely started that very evening. Lilith reveals that the eco-pod experiment with Pascal was a disaster — Pascal turned out to be claustrophobic, among other mental problems — and she abandons the project to return to Boston. Frasier and Rebecca, and eventually Pascal, converge on Cheers in pursuit of Lilith. Pascal, armed with a pistol, demands Lilith return to him, threatening to shoot Frasier and the others. Lilith demands that he shoot her first, which causes him to back down and surrender to police. Although Frasier initially refuses to take Lilith back, her pathetic sobbing wins him over, suggesting a reconciliation can occur.

Role in Frasier

In the spin-off Frasier, however, Lilith and Frasier turn out to have been divorced. Furthermore, Lilith has custody of Frederick. In the opening scene of the 1993 pilot episode of Frasier ("The Good Son"), Frasier is hosting his call-in radio show and relates the following:

Six months ago, I was living in Boston. My wife had left me, which was very painful. Then she came back to me, which was excruciating. ... so I ended the marriage once and for all, packed up my things, and moved back here to my home town of Seattle.

Actress Bebe Neuwirth reprises the role, Lilith, in several episodes of Frasier. In her Frasier episode, "The Show Where Lilith Comes Back" (1994), Lilith calls Frasier during his radio show, which surprises him, and mocks Frasier's psychiatric advice to his callers, especially one who overeats and whom Lilith attempts to help. Later at his apartment, Lilith reminds him about their times together during marriage. They make love at one point, but end up regretting it, strongly indicating no chance of a lasting reconciliation. Throughout the series, Lilith reappears on occasion, often rekindling hers and Frasier's lingering emotional bond, sometimes over concern about the future of Frederick (Trevor Einhorn),[3] who also made recurring appearances.

A running gag through Frasier is that Frasier's father and brother, Martin Crane (John Mahoney) and Niles Crane (David Hyde Pierce), are never pleased to see Lilith. Martin finds her "weird" and usually shouts out in shock when he unexpectedly sees her in his and Frasier's apartment. Niles resents her for mocking the vows at his wedding, but forgives her when she apologizes. Lilith's presence frightens Martin's dog Eddie, terrifying the normally defiant dog into obedience. Martin's live-in physical therapist, Daphne Moon (Jane Leeves), who fancies herself as having minor psychic abilities, routinely suffers debilitating headaches when Lilith is in town, citing an evil spiritual presence.

Lilith marries her fiancé Brian (James Morrison), an MIT seismologist who appears in only one episode "Adventures in Paradise, Part Two" (1994). The later episode "Room Service" (1998) reveals that Lilith is recently divorced from Brian after he came out of the closet.

Her final Frasier episode is "Guns 'N Neuroses" (2003), where Lilith's colleague Nancy (Christine Dunford), sets Frasier up on a blind date with Lilith, having no idea of their mutual history. However, the two meet up for a drink while Lilith is in Seattle and, when it overruns, they both end up cancelling on the blind date (never learning they had been set up with each other) and, when the two are interrupted by a loud argument between a young married couple in the next room, Frasier and Lilith successfully resolve the couple's dispute, then spend the night together watching television and finally falling asleep together on the couch. The next morning, they part ways as loving friends without restarting their romance.

Creation and development

A stereotypical "intelligent ice queen"[3] Lilith Sternin was supposed to appear in one episode of the fourth season of Cheers, "Second Time Around" (1986). However, she was brought back in the fifth season and became a recurring character thereafter.[4] Over the years, like Diane Chambers, an educated Lilith is often mocked yet "manages to put people in their place."[5]

Cheers and Frasier writers Ken Levine and David Isaacs found the chemistry of Frasier and Lilith "special" enough to compare them with Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy mixed with "Prozac" and to comfortably write stories about.[6] Nevertheless, Neuwirth viewed this role as detrimental to her acting talents and career, which motivated her into quitting Cheers in favor of mostly Broadway. However, she still recurringly appeared as Lilith in the spin-off Frasier.[7]{{quote|1=I find Lilith very innocent, very sweet, very naïve. She's socially inept. She has no idea how to react with other people. She's shy and uncomfortable with people. She's a scientist, she's very analytical, she's very honest. And she loves her husband [Frasier] very, very much. ... And she loves her child Frederick, too.[4]|2=Bebe Neuwirth|3=The Associated Press, May 1992}}

The Frasier episode "Wheels of Fortune" (2002) reveals that Lilith has a half-brother, Blaine (Michael Keaton), whom Frasier despises due to Blaine's relentless swindling.

Reception

This role earned Neuwirth two Emmy Awards as an Outstanding Supporting Actress in 1990 and 1991.[8]

According to an April 1–4, 1993, telephone survey of 1,011 people by the Times Mirror Center for the People and the Press (now Pew Research Center), before the Frasier premiere and the Cheers finale, Sam Malone (Ted Danson) was voted a favorite character by 26 percent, and Frasier Crane and Lilith Sternin were voted favorites by 1 percent each.[9][10] In response to a question of spinning off a character, 15 percent voted Sam, 12 percent voted Woody Boyd (Woody Harrelson), 10 percent voted Norm Peterson (George Wendt), and 29 percent voted no spin-offs.[10] Frasier Crane, whose own spin-off Frasier debuted in September 1993, was voted 2 percent to have his own show.[11]

Bill Simmons, who at the time worked for ESPN, deemed Lilith Sternin as one of his least favorite characters of Cheers.[12] Nevertheless, Martha Nolan from The New York Times called Frasier and Lilith "repressed" when married together in Cheers.[13] Josh Bell from About.com called Frasier and his ex-wife Lilith Sternin one of the "best sitcom divorced couples" of all-time.[14]

Steven H. Scheuer from Sarasota Herald-Tribune considered Lilith's significance to and marriage with Frasier "fun" to watch, especially when, in "Severe Crane Damage" (1990), she used comparisons between "the duller good boy" Frasier and "the interesting bad boy" Sam Malone as "psychiatric examples of the good boy-bad boy syndrome".[15] Faye Zuckerman and John Martin from The New York Times called their marriage in Cheers a hilariously "[perfect mismatch]".[16] Television critic Kevin McDonough from New York praised Kelsey Grammer and Bebe Neuwirth's performances as "repressed individuals" and "separate couple on TV" with "acidic and hilarious" chemistry together.[17]

References

1. ^{{cite news|title= Holiday Mission in a World of Silly Adults|work= The New York Times|date=November 26, 1996|url= https://www.nytimes.com/1996/11/26/arts/holiday-mission-in-a-world-of-silly-adults.html?scp=3&sq=Lilith%20Sternin&st=cse|accessdate=August 17, 2010 | first=John J. | last=O'Connor}}
2. ^{{cite news| url = https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=schQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=b9AMAAAAIBAJ&pg=6715,3377490&dq=sternin-crane&hl=en| title = Neuwirth brightens rigid role| date = May 31, 1992| work = Portsmouth Daily Times| agency = Associated Press| page = C5| via = Google News Archive}}
3. ^{{cite book| title = The Sitcom Reader: America Viewed and Skewed| publisher = State University of New York Press| year = 2005| isbn = 0-7914-6570-5| location = Albany, New York| pages = 253–260| chapter = Cheers: Searching for the Ideal Public Sphere in the Ideal Public House| accessdate = July 22, 2012| author = Brown, Robert S| chapterurl = https://www.amazon.com/Sitcom-Reader-America-Viewed-Skewed/dp/0791465691/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1342972311&sr=1-1&keywords=0791465691#reader_0791465691}}
4. ^{{cite news| url = https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=g_ErAAAAIBAJ&sjid=4mkFAAAAIBAJ&dq=lilith%20sternin&pg=1593%2C2107233| title = Neuwirth Laid Back about Uptight Role| first = Jerry| date = May 23, 1992| newspaper = Kentucky New Era| location = Hopkinsville, Kentucky| agency = The Associated Press| page = 5B| via = Google News Archive| author = Buck| accessdate = August 13, 2012}}
5. ^{{cite book| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=uVN7lUCaBxIC&lpg=PA183&ots=vtwoXp46uu&dq=cheers%20lilith%20diane&pg=PA183#v=onepage&q=cheers%20lilith%20diane&f=false| title = Television Women from Lucy to Friends: Fifty Years of Sitcoms and Feminism| first = Lynn C.| publisher = Praeger-Greenwood| year = 2003| isbn = 0-313-28781-3| page = 183| chapter = 1980s: Working Moms and Golden Women| oclc = 2002192498| author = Spangler}}
6. ^{{cite news| url = https://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/USAToday/access/55268489.html| title = Her love for Frasier lures Bebe Neuwirth for return visit| first = Jefferson| date = November 15, 1994| newspaper = USA Today| page = 3-D| via = ProQuest Archive| accessdate = July 28, 2012| author = Graham}}
7. ^{{cite news|title=Not Much Adieu About Lilith|date=May 13, 2004|accessdate=July 29, 2012|newspaper=New York Daily News|url=http://articles.nydailynews.com/2004-05-13/entertainment/18258375_1_frasier-crane-times-square-role-of-velma-kelly|author=Dominguez, Robert}}
8. ^{{Cite book| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=pEN6sTeG20AC| title = Cheers TV Show: A Comprehensive Reference| last = Bjorklund| first = Dennis A.| publisher = Praetorian Publishing| isbn = 9780967985237| pages = 461–462| language = en}}
9. ^{{Cite news| url = https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=UpYxAAAAIBAJ&sjid=RuEFAAAAIBAJ&pg=1185,331083| title = TV viewers glad Sam stayed single| last = Mills| first = Kim I.| date = May 2, 1993| work = The Daily Gazette| access-date = 2016-02-25| via = Google News Archive}}
10. ^{{Cite news| url = https://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/mcall/doc/392619749.html| title = SHOW PILES UP VIEWER CHEERS| last = Leffler| first = Pete| date = May 2, 1993| newspaper = The Morning Call| publication-place = Allentown, Pennsylvania| page = A.01| access-date = 2016-02-25| via = ProQuest Archive}}
11. ^{{Cite web| url = http://www.people-press.org/1998/05/10/mixed-reaction-to-post-seinfeld-era/| title = Mixed Reaction to Post-Seinfeld Era| date = May 10, 1998| website = Pew Research Center for the People and the Press| publisher = Pew Research Center| access-date = 2016-02-25}}
12. ^{{cite news|deadurl=yes |date=February 21, 2002 |url=http://proxy.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=simmons/020221 |author=Simmons, Bill |work=ESPN |archivedate=December 10, 2008 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20081210085522/http://proxy.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=simmons%2F020221 |title=Page 2: Dear Sports Guy... |accessdate=June 20, 2012 |df= }}
13. ^{{cite news| url = https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=wcMsAAAAIBAJ&sjid=0BQEAAAAIBAJ&dq=frasier%20lilith%20repressed&pg=1549%2C139807| title = The Best of Cheers: 11-year Run of TV Hit Leaves Fans with Fond Memories| date = May 16, 1993| newspaper = Sunday Star-News| agency = The New York Times| via = Google News Archive| accessdate = July 29, 2012| author = Nolan, Martha}}
14. ^{{cite web| url = http://tvcomedies.about.com/od/listsrecommendations/tp/sitcomdivorces.htm| title = The Best Sitcom Divorces| last = Bell| first = Josh| work = About.com| accessdate = July 22, 2012}}
15. ^{{cite news| url = https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=rTgeAAAAIBAJ&sjid=Yr8EAAAAIBAJ&dq=frasier%20lilith&pg=6702%2C7557502| title = Lilith Labels Frasier a 'Good Boy on Cheers| date = February 15, 1990| newspaper = Sarasota Herald-Tribune| location = Sarasota, Florida| page = 7E| via = Google News Archive| author = Scheuer, Steven H| accessdate = July 28, 2012}}
16. ^{{cite news| url = https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=i5BSAAAAIBAJ&sjid=1cQMAAAAIBAJ&dq=frasier%20lilith&pg=6458%2C5724809| title = Lilith, Frasier perfect together| first = Faye| date = June 24, 1997| first2 = John| newspaper = Telegraph Herald| agency = The New York Times Syndicate| page = 13B| via = Google News Archive| author = Zuckerman| author2 = Martin| accessdate = July 29, 2012}}
17. ^{{cite news| url = https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=DAJQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=TAgEAAAAIBAJ&dq=frasier%20lilith%20repressed&pg=6708%2C2829355| title = Exes mark the spot on Something So Right| first = Kevin| date = March 3, 1998| newspaper = Star-Banner| location = Ocala, Florida| page = 9C| via = Google News Archive| author = McDonough| accessdate = July 29, 2012}}

Bibliography

  • Bjorklund, Dennis A. [https://books.google.com/books?id=pEN6sTeG20AC Cheers TV Show: A Comprehensive Reference]. Praetorian Publishing, 1993. Google Books. Web. 8 April 2012. [https://books.google.com/books?id=hKbxOW2ONGEC Another edition]
  • Gates, Anita. "[https://www.nytimes.com/1998/04/19/arts/television-yes-america-has-a-class-system-see-frasier.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm TELEVISION; Yes, America Has a Class System. See 'Frasier']." The New York Times 19 Apr. 1998. Web. 09 Feb. 2012.

External links

{{Cheers}}{{Frasier}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Sternin-Crane, Lilith}}

9 : All articles that may contain original research|Fictional characters introduced in 1986|Cheers characters|Frasier characters|Fictional female doctors|Fictional psychiatrists|Fictional American Jews|Female characters in television|Crossover characters in television

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